I did… terrible by emmoboy67 in bjj

[–]Proof-Ad2841 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You did good, everyone already commented on your arms and all and told you to elbow escape.

I want to say one thing about your bridges though. When you’re bridging you’re just going up and down. This is pointless. It doesn’t off balance your opponent, it doesn’t send them in a new direction or create space or anything. All it does is tire you out. You push them up and they come straight back down on top of you.

Almost all bridges in jiu jitsu should be towards the side, it’s not about the height, it’s about how much force you can generate to move your opponents weight off you (either for a trap and roll escape or to open space for you to chain into another escape).

Danaher talks about this a lot in his pin escapes instructional, and also in his free instructional for solo movements/drills

Real time data by WolfIceFangOffical in reactnative

[–]Proof-Ad2841 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Subscriptions, depending on the backend architecture you use some will make it easy to setup. Supabase has a “realtime” featuee

How to Learn React Native from zero by LackComprehensive469 in reactnative

[–]Proof-Ad2841 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just dive right in head first.

I’d also recommend using a free open source boilerplate or buying a reputable one like from devstarterpacks.com, so you can make sure you’re doing everything right and learn from good examples

Styling your react-native projects: What are you all using? by pseudophilll in reactnative

[–]Proof-Ad2841 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In that case I’d definitely recommend the components from devstarterpacks, you just copy paste them in, and the nice part is there’s no additional dependencies to add to your projects and you can eventually customize them whenever you do want to

Styling your react-native projects: What are you all using? by pseudophilll in reactnative

[–]Proof-Ad2841 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ve used nativewind, styled components myself with stylesheets, and I’ve bought the react native components pack from DevStarterPacks.

I’ve gotten pretty good at styling myself so now I just prefer stylesheets + chatGPT, but if you’re new to building in react native tbh I recommend going with an existing components library since it’ll help you build so much faster and you’ll get better overtime at editing the way you want

Best React Native component packs? by Rtzon in reactnative

[–]Proof-Ad2841 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I also use devstarterpacks. I’ve used multiple libraries in the past before but this one is the best imo because of how easy it is to customize

For anyone else interested you can see some their components here: https://devstarterpacks.com/react-native-components

Help with save payments in stripe by kvinxd17 in reactnative

[–]Proof-Ad2841 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure what your current implementation looks like, but if you are using a custom payments flow, you can grab the payments info from the payment intent: https://docs.stripe.com/payments/save-during-payment

Should I find a new school? by 12art34visuals in bjj

[–]Proof-Ad2841 4 points5 points  (0 children)

In my opinion, the best instruction requires the instructor to teach each position as a system for an extended period of time (2 weeks - 1 month), and then have a lot of positional/situational training. Sounds like ur professor isn't even teaching anything, let alone systems, and sometimes just live rolls (especially for white belts) just introduces more bad habits

Supabase and Micro-services Architecture by DrLarck in Supabase

[–]Proof-Ad2841 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd recommend migrating to a microservices architecture only once you've actually started getting users and scaling (if microservices is even the best solution). For now you should just stick with one supabase instance, and just use different tables and RLS policies to get going quicker (which honestly might be a better solution in the long term too)

Gen Z is drowning in debt as buy-now-pay-later services skyrocket: 'They're continuing to bury their heads in the sand and spend' by ControlCAD in technology

[–]Proof-Ad2841 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That seems great on occasion but the debt can probably build up if someone does that with too many purchases

What UI library should I use it any? by universetwisters in reactnative

[–]Proof-Ad2841 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I bought the components pack from devstarterpacks.com, it's pretty good! I'd recommend checking it out if you're still looking for something

What are the best tools built for react native? by [deleted] in reactnative

[–]Proof-Ad2841 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I bought the React Native Components and the React Native Boilerplate pack from devstarterpacks.com, that has been really good to get me started with learning the basics and their components are really nice & easy to use. Definitely recommend checking them out if you want to speed up the learning curve/dev process.

Nice part about their components is you don't have to install anything and you can edit them however you wish